# Break-Even ROAS Explained Canonical URL: https://growthops.tools/guides/break-even-roas-explained/ Page type: Guide Updated: June 15, 2026 ## Quick Answer Break-even ROAS turns contribution margin into an ad-spend floor. If contribution before ads is $40 on a $100 order, the store needs 2.50x ROAS just to break even before overhead. ## Use When Use Break-Even ROAS Explained when a store decision needs a clear next step instead of a vague note. ## Output A clearer explanation, reusable decision frame, and links to related tools or templates. ## Method Read the formula, then run it by product group, offer type, and channel. A single blended number is useful for orientation but risky for budget decisions. ## Limits The explanation focuses on order economics. Cohort LTV, cash payback, inventory limits, and brand goals can change the final decision. ## Why ROAS gets misread ROAS is easy to discuss because it looks like a clean performance number. A campaign at 3.0x sounds better than a campaign at 2.0x, and dashboards make that comparison feel precise. The problem is that ROAS does not know the cost structure behind the orders. A bulky low-margin product and a small high-margin accessory can report the same ROAS while creating very different amounts of cash. Break-even ROAS is the correction. It pulls the conversation back from the ad account into the store's actual economics. Before a team asks whether a campaign can scale, it should ask how many contribution dollars exist before ad spend and how much of that contribution the campaign is allowed to consume. ## A better way to talk about targets When a team sets a target ROAS, the useful question is not 'what number does the platform like?' It is 'what number protects contribution for this product group after shipping, fees, discounts, and return assumptions?' That framing turns ROAS from a vanity benchmark into a constraint the business can defend. ## Break-even ROAS is a margin question The basic formula is simple: revenue divided by contribution before ad spend. The hard part is knowing which costs belong in contribution. For ecommerce, that usually includes product cost, fulfillment, shipping, payment fees, packaging, and sometimes return allowance. Worked example: A $100 order with $45 contribution before ads has a break-even ROAS of 2.22x. A $100 order with $25 contribution before ads has a break-even ROAS of 4.00x. Same revenue, very different scaling room. ## Why a single store-wide ROAS target is risky Situation | Why the target should change High-margin accessories | Can tolerate lower ROAS if fulfillment and returns are controlled. Heavy products | Shipping can raise the break-even floor sharply. Discounted bundles | AOV may rise while margin dollars fall. Subscription or repeat-purchase products | First order may be allowed to break even if retention is proven. Clearance inventory | Cash recovery may matter more than normal profit target. Decision note: A platform target is an instruction to spend under a rule. If the rule is based on store average economics, it can overspend on weak-margin products and underspend on products that can profitably acquire customers at a lower ROAS. Calculate the break-even floor by product group. Separate full-price, discounted, bundled, and clearance orders. Add shipping, fulfillment, payment fees, and expected returns before setting the target. Revisit the target after price, supplier, or shipping changes. ## Reference rules Target ROAS bidding can use conversion value, but it still needs business-side margin judgment. A bidding target that works for a high-margin accessory may be too low for a bulky product with expensive fulfillment, even when both report the same tracked revenue. Google Ads: About Target ROAS bidding: https://support.google.com/google-ads/answer/6268637 ## Break-even formula variants Use case | Formula Single order | Revenue / contribution before ads Product group | Group revenue / group contribution before ads Campaign with mixed products | Tracked revenue / weighted contribution before ads LTV-informed target | First-order revenue / allowable CAC, after payback rules are set ## Common Questions ### Why does lower margin require higher ROAS? Less contribution is available to pay for ads, so every ad dollar needs to produce more revenue to break even. ### Can a campaign below break-even ROAS still be acceptable? Sometimes, if repeat purchase economics and payback are proven. Without that evidence, it is usually risky. ### Should I optimize for platform ROAS alone? No. Platform ROAS should be translated into contribution dollars before budget decisions. ## Downloads - Download margin model CSV: https://growthops.tools/downloads/ecommerce-margin-model.csv ## Related Pages - Break-Even ROAS Calculator: https://growthops.tools/tools/break-even-roas-calculator/ - ROAS Calculation Example: https://growthops.tools/templates/roas-calculation-example/ - Ecommerce Profit Margin Calculator: https://growthops.tools/tools/ecommerce-profit-margin-calculator/ ## References - Google Ads: About Target ROAS bidding: https://support.google.com/google-ads/answer/6268637